(Reuters) – Drugmaker AbbVie Inc said on Tuesday it would buy Botox-maker Allergan Plc for about $63 billion, grabbing control of by far the biggest name in medical aesthetics to help reduce its reliance on blockbuster arthritis treatment Humira. FILE PHOTO: The Allergan logo is seen in this photo illustration in Singapore November 23, 2015. REUTERS/Thomas White/File PhotoAbbVie has been under pressure to diversify its portfolio as Humira, the world’s best-selling drug, is already in competition with cheaper versions in Europe and faces expiration of its patents in 2023 in the United States, its most important market. Humira, which brought in revenue of about $20 billion last year, reported the first fall in quarterly sales in years in the January-March period. AbbVie Chief Executive Richard Gonzalez, 65, will helm the combined company and remain chairman and chief executive through 2023, the companies said. Allergan Chief Executive Officer Brent Saunders, who put together the current version of his company through a series of deals to roll up several pharmaceutical firms in 2014, will join AbbVie’s board upon completion of the deal. Saunders built his reputation as a dealmaker, but Allergan has struggled since Pfizer Inc walked away from a $160 billion deal in 2016. Allergan’s shares have lost around half their value since then. He has been under pressure over the last year to break up or sell the company, with activist investor David Tepper running a campaign to urge Allergan to hire an independent chairman. Shares of AbbVie have also languished, losing more than a third of their value from highs hit in January 2018 over concerns about competition to Humira. The deal comes months after Bristol-Myers Squibb Co agreed to buy Celgene Corp in a $74 billion deal. Allergan shareholders will receive 0.8660 AbbVie shares and $120.30 in cash for each share held, for a total consideration of $188.24 per Allergan share, a premium of 45% to the stock’s Monday close. Including debt, the deal values Allergan at $83 billion. AbbVie shares were down 8% at $72.20, while Allergan shares were up 31.6% at $170.46 in early trading. AbbVie’s offer price is a far cry from Pfizer’s all-stock offer for Allergan that valued the Ireland-based drugmaker at $363.63 per share in 2015. Maxim Jacobs, director of research for North America at Edison Investment Research, said the deal provides AbbVie with a set of assets to help diversify away from Humira at a very reasonable price. “In return, Allergan shareholders get a decent premium to what has been an outrageously low stock price,” Jacobs said. The deal is expected to add 10% to adjusted earnings per share over the first full year following the close, the companies said. The deal was a better-than-expected outcome for Allergan as investors and analysts were expecting a split, Cantor Fitzgerald analyst Louise Chen wrote in a note, adding that it is unlikely that anyone else will step in and bid for Allergan at this point. Reporting by Mike Erman in New York, Manas Mishra and Ankur Banerjee in Bengaluru; Editing by Shinjini Ganguli and Sriraj KalluvilaOur Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.